I'm hardening my tomatoes this week by leaving them out during the day and bringing them in later each night ... yellow leaves now does signal an issue though. Tomatoes want a certain soil composition, maybe some organic fertilizer?
Quote from: Bill Peckham on May 18, 2010, 03:57:53 PMI'm hardening my tomatoes this week by leaving them out during the day and bringing them in later each night ... yellow leaves now does signal an issue though. Tomatoes want a certain soil composition, maybe some organic fertilizer?Thanks for the thoughts, Bill. Gwyn began hardening the tomatoes immediately after I mentioned this and added more organic compost, and they seem to be doing well. We have been watering them with 'worm tea' from our vermicomposting bin. Branches with yellow leaves withered and fell off, but new leaves are sprouting from the stem. We now have five tomato plants, but the other four were only acquired a few days ago and are still settling in. The currant tomato plant has a few flowers growing on the top, one has even opened. Does anyone know if this is a problem? Should we snip them off?
Hopefully your cops are a little brighter than the dozy tw@s in Scotland: ClickLittle old lady grows tomato plants in her kitchen and gets raided by the drug squad because they thought the tomatos were cannabis.
Quote from: cariad on June 03, 2010, 11:52:25 AMQuote from: Bill Peckham on May 18, 2010, 03:57:53 PMThanks for the thoughts, Bill. Gwyn began hardening the tomatoes immediately after I mentioned this and added more organic compost, and they seem to be doing well. We have been watering them with 'worm tea' from our vermicomposting bin. Branches with yellow leaves withered and fell off, but new leaves are sprouting from the stem. We now have five tomato plants, but the other four were only acquired a few days ago and are still settling in. The currant tomato plant has a few flowers growing on the top, one has even opened. Does anyone know if this is a problem? Should we snip them off?Aaaaaaah flowers are good, don't snip them. I have some lilies along the fence that I planted a couple Octobers ago , and they're going great. They'll be blooming in the next week or so. One has eight or so flowers and is taller than me.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on May 18, 2010, 03:57:53 PMThanks for the thoughts, Bill. Gwyn began hardening the tomatoes immediately after I mentioned this and added more organic compost, and they seem to be doing well. We have been watering them with 'worm tea' from our vermicomposting bin. Branches with yellow leaves withered and fell off, but new leaves are sprouting from the stem. We now have five tomato plants, but the other four were only acquired a few days ago and are still settling in. The currant tomato plant has a few flowers growing on the top, one has even opened. Does anyone know if this is a problem? Should we snip them off?
Still waiting for signs of cucumbers.
Quote from: marcy996 on June 05, 2010, 05:08:45 AM Still waiting for signs of cucumbers. Now you do have to clip out flowers on cucumbers.Just the male flowers though. Only the female flowers grow into cucumbers and you don't want them fertilized.
Aaaaaaah flowers are good, don't snip them. When (if) those flowers pollinate that's what will turn into tomatoes.
You could ask a neighbour to take some of your strawberries and make freezer jam with it. Delicious and easier than cooked jam...tastes more like a "fresh" strawberry flavour to me.